Joanna Kulig facts for kids
Joanna Kulig (Polish: [jɔˈanna ˈkulik]; born 24 June 1982) is a Polish actress and singer. Noted for performing in different languages, she has worked in film, television and radio as well as on stage. She is the recipient of a European Film Award and two Polish Film Awards, and her work has been recognised at various film festivals. In 2018, Polish magazine Wprost included her among the 50 most influential Poles for her contributions to the cinema of Poland.
After an unsuccessful attempt at a career as a jazz singer, Kulig enrolled at the AST National Academy of Theatre Arts in Kraków, graduating in 2007. She began performing on stage while still in drama school, debuting in the play A Midsummer Night's Dream. Her first starring film role in the 2007 drama Wednesday, Thursday Morning won her the award for Best Debut at the Gdynia Film Festival. She received further acclaim for her performance in the 2011 film Elles, which earned her Best Supporting Actress at the Polish Film Awards and Gdynia Film Festival.
Kulig became known for her frequent collaborations with director Paweł Pawlikowski. She appeared in three of his films: The Woman in the Fifth (2011), the Academy Award-winning Ida (2013) and Cold War (2018). Her starring role in the lattermost earned her widespread recognition and Best Actress accolades at the European Film Awards and Polish Film Awards. Kulig's other notable credits include the highest-grossing Polish film of all time, Clergy (2018), and the Netflix series The Eddy (2020).
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Early life and education
Kulig was born on 24 June 1982 in Krynica, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland. Her mother worked as a cook at a local kindergarten and her father was a folk poet. She was raised with four siblings in Muszynka. Her younger sister, Justyna Schneider, is also an actress and adopted their great-grandmother's surname to avoid confusion as their first names are similar.
While still living in Krynica, Kulig graduated from the Frédéric Chopin First Degree State Music School where she studied piano. At 18, she moved to Kraków, and enrolled at the Mieczysław Karłowicz State Music School Complex, from which she graduated in singing. In the meantime, she also completed the Kraków Vocational Technical High School for Hotel Administration. In 2007, Kulig earned an acting degree with a specialisation in singing from the AST National Academy of Theatre Arts in Kraków. She was the first in her family to graduate from a university.
Career
1998–2018: Career beginnings and stardom in Poland
In 1998, Kulig won an episode of the Polish television talent show A Chance for Success by performing Grzegorz Turnau's song "Między ciszą a ciszą". She took part in the show's annual final, and came third. Turnau later invited her to sing with him on his 2002 album Nawet. Kulig also participated in season two of the Polish television talent show Idol in 2002. She was eliminated in the semi-finals.
In 2006, while still in drama school, she made her stage debut as Hermia in the play A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Helena Modrzejewska National Stary Theater in Kraków. In 2007, she starred in Grzegorz Pacek's drama Wednesday, Thursday Morning, which marked her film debut and earned her the Gdynia Film Festival award for Best Debut. She followed this with the titular role in the 2008 television play Doktor Halina. Kulig later admitted that seeing herself in the play on television convinced her to return to acting as she quit briefly. She said: "When I was trying to convince myself that it was over and I quit as it was not for me, Doktor Halina came on TV. I was impressed. I was sitting watching this performance and thought: 'Gosh, I'm really not that bad!'". Her performance caught the attention of director Paweł Pawlikowski, and he invited her to audition for the lead role in his film Ida. Although deemed unfit for the part, she impressed Pawlikowski who became determined to work with her on another project. While making his 2011 psychological thriller The Woman in the Fifth, he created a role that was not originally in the script specifically for her. In the film, set in Paris, she portrayed Ania, a Polish barmaid who falls in love with the protagonist American writer Tom Ricks (Ethan Hawke). In 2011, Kulig was also partnered with Juliette Binoche for Małgorzata Szumowska's drama Elles, similarly set in Paris, in which she played Alicja. The film premiered to mixed reception, though Kulig's performance received praise. Kevin Jagernauth of IndieWire opined that she "has the potential to be breakout star boasting a strong screen presence and an undeniable beauty". She won Best Supporting Actress at the Polish Academy Awards and Gdynia Film Festival. Aside from these two projects, 2011 saw Kulig appear in the war drama Remembrance, and star in the Polish comedies: Los numeros, Million Dollars and Dance Marathon. She earned a Golden Duck Award nomination for Best Actress for her performances in the last two.
Kulig received her second Polish Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress for her role in Jacek Borcuch's drama Lasting, which premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. Later that year, she appeared in Pawlikowski's Academy Award-winning drama Ida, and in Eun-jin Pang's film Way Back Home. Initially considered to play the title character in the former, she was instead cast in a smaller role of a nightclub singer. Kulig also had a small part in the 2013 blockbuster Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters, which required her to wear prosthetics. In 2014, she was cast in a leading role on the Polish sitcom O mnie się nie martw, starring as Iga in its first nine seasons until 2018. Kulig next starred in the romantic comedies Sophie Seeks Seven (2014) and Warsaw by Night (2015), and in the commercially successful films Disco Polo (2015) and Pitbull: Tough Women (2016). Disco Polo, directed by her husband Maciej Bochniak, saw her in the role of a disco polo star Gensonina. In Pitbull: Tough Women, Poland's highest-grossing film of 2016, Kulig played a policewoman Zuza. She also portrayed Sister Irena in Anne Fontaine's critically acclaimed 2016 World War II drama The Innocents inspired by a true story.
2018–present: International recognition
Kulig's international breakthrough came in 2018 when she starred in Pawlikowski's historical drama film Cold War. The film marked their third collaboration, which prompted Pawlikowski to call her his "muse". The part of Zula, a woman in post-war Poland who joins a folk music touring group, was once again written by Pawlikowski with her in mind. Kulig was drawn to the role as it required her to sing and dance, allowing her to showcase her talents; she trained with a folk group for half a year in preparation for the part. In the film, she notably performs the traditional Polish folk song "Dwa serduszka" ("Two Hearts"), termed by Vulture as "the movie's unofficial theme song". Mark Kermode of The Observer wrote that she "delivers a star-making performance of astonishing range and depth", and Mick LaSalle of San Francisco Chronicle stated that "she takes the role of a lifetime between her teeth, chomps on it, pounds it into the ground and never lets go for a second." According to Scott Feinberg of The Hollywood Reporter, "in a fair world ... Kulig would not only be a serious contender for a best actress nom, but would quickly become an in-demand actress in Hollywood, too." Kulig received the Best Actress Award at the 31st European Film Awards, and the Polish Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance. That same year, she played local priest's pregnant girlfriend in Wojciech Smarzowski's film Clergy, which went on to become the highest-grossing Polish film of all time. Due to its themes, the film caused controversy especially among right-wing groups in the largely Catholic country and led to a nationwide debate about the role of the church in the Polish society. In 2019, she was cast in the recurring role of Johanna, titular character's mother, in Amazon Studios series Hanna.
Kulig starred as Polish jazz singer Maja in Damien Chazelle's 2020 Netflix musical drama series The Eddy. The character was originally intended to be American, but after meeting with Chazelle the part was rewritten for her. In 2021, Kulig was cast as the lead in TVN thriller series Spider's Web playing a spider behaviour specialist trying to unravel the mystery of the death of her mother and sister. She served as one of the jurors of the Un Certain Regard section at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival. That year, she had a starring role opposite Gilles Lellouche in the action thriller Kompromat directed by Jérôme Salle. The film was released to mixed reception, and of Kulig's role Paste's Andy Crump wrote: "Diminishing the shine of an actress as luminous as Kulig is an impressive feat, but she's left darkened as Lellouche's object of desire, unable to perform beyond the single dimension given to her."
In 2023, Kulig appeared in Rebecca Miller's romantic comedy She Came to Me alongside Peter Dinklage, Anne Hathaway, Marisa Tomei and Brian d'Arcy James. She was Miller's first choice for the role of a Polish immigrant Magdalena as she regards her "the greatest Polish actress, I know". Despite the mixed reception of the film, Kate Erbland of IndieWire found Kulig's performance "heartbreaking", and David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter thought that "only Kulig ... registers as a compassionate presence grounded in a modicum of truth." Kulig next starred as a wife of a man transitioning to a woman in socially conservative Poland in Małgorzata Szumowska and Michał Englert's drama Woman Of..., which premiered at the 2023 Venice International Film Festival. She also had a supporting role in Michael Keaton's 2023 noir thriller Knox Goes Away, and is set to make a guest appearance in the upcoming Apple TV+ miniseries Masters of the Air. Reviewing the former, Pete Hammond of Deadline Hollywood said that "she makes an impression as Knox's faithful lover".
Personal life
Kulig is a practicing Christian. Aside from speaking Polish—her first language—she speaks English, French and German, and has performed in those languages. In 2009, she married film director and screenwriter Maciej Bochniak. On 14 February 2019, she gave birth to their son at the UCLA Santa Monica Medical Center.
An ambassador for Anna Dymna's Against the Odds Foundation—an organisation helping adults with intellectual disabilities—Kulig has supported its efforts on numerous occasions. In 2023, she was honoured with St. Brother Albert Medal for her charity work for people with disabilities, which she dedicated to her mother. When accepting the award, she said: "Moments like this show that it is worth helping others. Thank you mum for teaching me that."
Kulig starred in the autumn-winter 2018 advertising campaign for fashion retailer Reserved, alongside Jeanne Damas. In 2018, Polish magazine Wprost included her among the 50 most influential Poles for her contributions to the cinema of Poland, and Glamour Poland named her Woman of the Year. She also ranked fourth on the former's 2019 list of the 50 most influential Polish women. In 2023, she became a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Acting credits
Film
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
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2007 | Wednesday, Thursday Morning | Teresa | ||
2009 | Janosik: A True Story | Girl | Polish dub, choir | |
2009 | I Love You So Much | Ewelina | Short film | |
2011 | Los numeros | Sylwia | ||
2011 | Million Dollars | Zuzanna | ||
2011 | Dance Marathon | Agnieszka | ||
2011 | Elles | Alicja | ||
2011 | The Woman in the Fifth | Ania | ||
2011 | Remembrance | Magdalena Limanowska | ||
2012 | A Turtle's Tale 2: Sammy's Escape from Paradise |
Konsuela | Polish dub | |
2013 | Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters | Red-Haired Witch | ||
2013 | Lasting | Marta | ||
2013 | Zambezia | Neville's wife | Polish dub | |
2013 | Ida | Singer | ||
2013 | Khumba | Fifi | Polish dub | |
2013 | Way Back Home | Yalka | ||
2014 | Sophie Seeks Seven | Patrycja | ||
2015 | Warsaw by Night | Marek's ex-lover | Segment: Iga | |
2015 | Disco Polo | Anka "Gensonina" | ||
2016 | The Innocents | Sister Irena | ||
2016 | Pitbull: Tough Women | Zuza | ||
2017 | Cargo | N/A | Short film | |
2018 | Cold War | Zula Lichoń | ||
2018 | Play | Mother | Short film | |
2018 | Clergy | Hanka Tomala | ||
2018 | 7 Emotions | Gosia's mother | ||
2018 | Love Is Everything | Magda Rodzińska | ||
2019 | I Am Lying Now | Agent | ||
2019 | Safe Inside | Sylvia | ||
2022 | Everyone Knows Better | Ania | ||
2022 | Kompromat | Svetlana | ||
2023 | She Came to Me | Magdalena | ||
2023 | Woman Of... | Iza | ||
2023 | Knox Goes Away | |||
TBA | Island | Joanna | Post-production |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
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1998 | A Chance for Success | Herself | Contestant | |
2002 | Idol | Herself | Season 2 contestant | |
2006 | Pensjonat pod Różą | Kasia | 2 episodes | |
2007 | Pastorałka | Angel / Caroller | Television play | |
2007 | Prime Minister | Magdalena Nowasz | 3 episodes | |
2008 | Teraz albo nigdy! | Zyta | 4 episodes | |
2008 | Doktor Halina | Halina Szwarc | Television play | |
2008 | Days of Honor | "Mucha" | 5 episodes | |
2008 | Trzeci oficer | Halina | Episode: "Dezerter" | |
2009 | Ojciec Mateusz | Dorota Mielnicka | Episode: "Koncert" | |
2010–2011 | Szpilki na Giewoncie | Wika Bura | 15 episodes | |
2011 | Janosik: A True Story | Girl | Polish dub, choir | |
2011 | Smuteczek czyli ostatni naiwni | Sasanna | Television special | |
2013 | Spies of Warsaw | Renata | 1 episode | |
2013 | Na krawędzi | Sylwia Zawada | 5 episodes | |
2013 | Pamiętniki pani Hanki | Hanka | Television play | |
2014–2018 | O mnie się nie martw | Jadwiga "Iga" Małecka | 103 episodes | |
2014–2015 | The Crime | Monika Krajewska | ||
2016 | Dom kobiet | Róża | Television play | |
2018 | The Trap | Justyna Mateja | 3 episodes | |
2019–2021 | Hanna | Johanna | 6 episodes | |
2020 | The Eddy | Maja | ||
2021 | Tuca & Bertie | Esther Emu | Voice, episode: "Bird Mechanics" | |
2021 | Spider's Web | Kornelia Titko | ||
2024 | Masters of the Air | Paulina | 1 episode |
Stage
Year | Title | Role | Playwright | Theatre | Ref. |
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2006 | A Midsummer Night's Dream | Hermia | William Shakespeare | Helena Modrzejewska National Stary Theater, Kraków | |
2007 | Assemblywomen | Girl | Aristophanes | Helena Modrzejewska National Stary Theater, Kraków | |
2007 | Oresteia | Tisiphone | Aeschylus | Helena Modrzejewska National Stary Theater, Kraków | |
2007 | Operetta | N/A | Witold Gombrowicz | Theater Scena STU, Kraków | |
2007 | Oczyszczenie | Make-up artist | Petr Zelenka | Theater Scena STU, Kraków | |
2008 | Zakochany Paryż | N/A | N/A | Kielce Cultural Centre | |
2009 | The Beelzebub Sonata | Hilda | Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz | Theater Scena STU, Kraków | |
2010 | Vassa Zheleznova | Natalya | Maxim Gorky | Och-Theatre, Warsaw | |
2013 | Chopin | Kornelia | Marcin Macuk | Palladium Theatre, Warsaw | |
2014 | Niech no tylko zakwitną jabłonie | Mimi / Hela | Agnieszka Osiecka | Ateneum Theatre, Warsaw | |
2016 | Róbmy swoje. Piosenki Wojciecha Młynarskiego | Performer | Wojciech Młynarski | Ateneum Theatre, Warsaw |
Radio
Year | Title | Role | Playwright | Radio | Ref. |
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2014 | Katarantka | Podaj Mi Rękę | Tomasz Man | Polish Radio | |
2015 | Death in Venice | Tadzio | Thomas Mann | Polish Radio | |
2016 | Woody Love | Emma | Antoni Winch | Polish Radio | |
2016 | Animal Ferocity | N/A | Stanisław Barańczak | Polish Radio | |
2017 | Futbolistki | Captain's girlfriend | Tomasz Man | Polish Radio |
Discography
Title | Year | Album | Ref. |
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"Gniew" (Grzegorz Turnau with backing vocals from Joanna Kulig) |
2002 | Nawet | |
"Liryka, liryka" (Grzegorz Turnau with backing vocals from Joanna Kulig) |
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"Oddal żal" (Grzegorz Turnau with backing vocals from Joanna Kulig) |
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"Sancho (dytyramb)" (Grzegorz Turnau with backing vocals from Joanna Kulig) |
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"Gdybym była prezydentem" | 2013 | Pamiętnik Pani Hanki (Piosenki z musicalu) | |
"Lubię być szczęśliwa" | |||
"Małżeństwo to jest gra" | |||
"Trzydziesty dziewiąty" (with Kamilla Baar, Ewa Konstancja Bułhak, Jacek Koman, Joachim Lamża, Grzegorz Małecki, Danuta Stenka, Borys Szyc, Krzysztof Wakulinski and Maciej Zakościelny) |
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"24 mila baci" | Ida | ||
"Guarda Che Luna" | |||
"Miłość w Portofino" | |||
"Nie płacz kiedy odjadę" | |||
"O Jimmy Joe" | |||
"Rudy rydz" | |||
"Dość" (with Dawid Ogrodnik) |
Muzyka z serca 2014 | ||
"Czas nas uczy pogody" | 2014 | Sophie Seeks Seven | |
"Takiego chłopaka" | |||
"Dziś idę walczyć mamo" (with O.S.T.R., Waldemar Kasta and Joanna Lewandowska) |
Nowe Pokolenie 14/44 | ||
"Bo wszyscy Polacy" (with Dawid Ogrodnik) |
2015 | Piosenki z filmu Disco Polo | |
"Oczy czarne" | |||
"Taka jestem" | |||
"Takim cię wyśniłam" | |||
"Cargo" (Wysokilot and Fidser featuring Joanna Kulig) |
Tylko swoi | ||
"Baio Bongo" | 2018 | Cold War (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) | |
"Deux coeurs" | |||
"Dwa serduszka" | |||
"Dwa serduszka" (jazz version) | |||
"I Loves You, Porgy" | |||
"Ja za wodą, ty za wodą" | |||
"Kak mnogo devushek khoroshikh (Serdtse)" | |||
"Kantata o Stalinie" | |||
"Loin de toi" | |||
"Międzynarodówka" | |||
"Svilen konac" | |||
"Związane mam ręce" (Młynarski-Masecki Jazz Camerata Varsoviensis featuring Joanna Kulig) |
Fogg – Pieśniarz Warszawy | ||
"Yes Sir, I Can Boogie" | Non-album song | ||
"Chociaż zmęczona" | Kolędy 2018 | ||
"Mizerna cicha" (with Michał Bajor) |
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"Ja się nie przyzwyczaję" (with Julia Konarska, Olga Sarzyńska, Katarzyna Ucherska, Wojciech Brzeziński, Krzysztof Gosztyła and Tomasz Schuchardt) |
2019 | Ateneum gra Młynarskiego | |
"Siedzę w oknie, patrzę w dal" | |||
"Bar Fly" (with The Eddy Band) |
2020 | The Eddy (From the Original Netflix Series) | |
"Black Cat" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"Can't Stay Away" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"Call Me When You Get There" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"Dupin's Blue" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"Elle me dit" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"Gossip" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"Le Serpent qui danse" (with Tchéky Karyo) |
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"Let It Go" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"Kiss Me in the Morning" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"Not a Day Goes By" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"On the Way" (with The Eddy Band and Arnaud Dolmen) |
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"Open to Persuasion" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"PCH" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"Play All Night" (with The Eddy Band and Arnaud Dolmen) |
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"The Eddy" (with The Eddy Band) |
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"The Eddy" (with The Eddy Band, Amandla Stenberg and André Holland) |
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"Cicha noc" (with Zbigniew Wodecki) |
Non-album songs | ||
"Kolęda na ten czas" (with Irena Santor, Anna Rusowicz, Monika Kuszyńska, Jacek Cygan, Piotr Rubik, Zbigniew Zamachowski, Krzysztof Cugowski, Wojciech Cugowski, Czesław Mozil, Mietek Szcześniak, Adam Nowak, Mateusz Pospieszalski and Marcin Januszkiewicz) |
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"Już kąpiesz się nie dla mnie" (Szymon Komasa featuring Joanna Kulig and Aleksander Dębicz) |
2021 | Piosenki z Kabaretu Starszych Panów. Laboratorium | |
"Piosenka jest dobra na wszystko" (Szymon Komasa featuring Joanna Kulig, Aleksander Dębicz and Santander Orchestra) |
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"To będzie miłość nieduża" (Szymon Komasa featuring Joanna Kulig and Santander Orchestra) |
Awards and nominations
Organisations | Year | Category | Work | Result | Ref. |
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Chlotrudis Awards | 2019 | Best Actress | Cold War | Nominated | |
El Gouna Film Festival | 2018 | Best Actress | Cold War | Won | |
European Film Awards | 2018 | Best Actress | Cold War | Won | |
Gdynia Film Festival | 2007 | Best Debut | Wednesday, Thursday Morning | Won | |
2012 | Best Supporting Actress | Elles | Won | ||
2012 | Elle Crystal Star Award | Elles | Won | ||
Glamour Woman of the Year (Poland) | 2018 | N/A | N/A | Won | |
Golden Duck | 2008 | Best Actress | Wednesday, Thursday Morning | Nominated | |
2011 | Best Actress | Dance Marathon Million Dollars |
Nominated | ||
2012 | Best Actress | Elles | Nominated | ||
IndieWire Critics Poll | 2018 | Best Lead Actress | Cold War | Fourth | |
International Cinephile Society | 2019 | Best Actress | Cold War | Nominated | |
Koszalin Festival of Film Debuts "The Youth and Film" | 2008 | Acting Debut | Wednesday, Thursday Morning | Won | |
London Critics Circle Film Awards | 2019 | Best Actress | Cold War | Nominated | |
National Broadcasting Council Awards | 2016 | Arete Award for Acting Debut in the Polish Radio Theatre | N/A | Won | |
Palm Springs International Film Festival | 2019 | FIPRESCI Prize for Best Actress in a Foreign Language Film | Cold War | Won | |
Paszport Polityki | 2019 | Film | N/A | Won | |
Polish Film Awards | 2013 | Best Supporting Actress | Elles | Won | |
2014 | Best Supporting Actress | Lasting | Nominated | ||
2019 | Best Actress | Cold War | Won | ||
Telekamery | 2015 | Actress | N/A | Nominated | |
2016 | Actress | N/A | Nominated | ||
2019 | Actress | N/A | Won | ||
2022 | Actress of Last 25 Years | N/A | Nominated | ||
Transatlantyk Festival | 2018 | Transatlantyk Golden Ark for Best Actress | N/A | Won | |
Two Theatres Festival – Festival of Polish Radio and Television Theatre | 2008 | Polish Television Theatre: Best Female Role | Doktor Halina | Won | |
Zbigniew Cybulski Award | 2013 | N/A | Elles | Nominated |
See also
In Spanish: Joanna Kulig para niños